The New Yorker Fiction Forum

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Click here to see what's happening in the fiction of each issue of The New Yorker.

Last Five Issues: ____________________________

Links & Stuff

I'm liking Ron Charles more and more and more, and this video review of Jonathan Franzen's Freedom makes just makes me giddy.

Over at Critical Mass, the blog for the NBCC, Wyatt Mason writes about Roth's "tenth, short, and perfect novel, The Ghost Writer." I agree with Mason; this is one great novel, and a great place to start if you're looking to get to know Roth. Here is my review. It wasn't my first Roth, but it is the book that made him one of my favorite writers of all time (if not my favorite).

This promises to get interesting. Anis Shivani of The Huffington Post has posted his list of the fifteen most overrated contemporary American authors. As usual, he makes some great points. Often when I see these, though, I think, "Okay, so they are bad. Now, tell me who is good -- and why the difference." Shivani promises to follow-up with the most underrated contemporary American writers. Followed with similar lists for American writers of the past century, and going further to include lists for the global writers.

Patricia Zohn interviews Jennifer Egan at The Huffington Post. I still think A Visit from the Goon Squad is one of the best books of the year.

New York Magazine has a nice look at independent bookstores in the City, which are rising "against all odds."

At Reading Matters, Kim has featured my blog on her Triple Choice Tuesday. My choices? The Ghost Writer, So Long, See You Tomorrow, and Butcher's Crossing. Pop on over and see my fresh, brief write-up of each title.

For Independence Day, the Huffington Post has a slide show of fifteen great independent publishers, featuring a few of my favorites -- Open Letter, Archipelago -- and a few I didn't know about. New Directions is a model of perfection, and I agree. I have stacks and stacks of books from these three presses, and I'm anxious to see what the others have to offer.

Michiko Kakutani's review of Jacob de Zoet is surprising in its lack of substance. It's mostly just a plot rehash (which I think gives away a bit too much). It's boring to read and insightless, where I usually enjoy her reviews even if I disagree (as I do here). I'm not saying my reviews are better, surely, but this is pretty poor for The New York Times daily and from a Pulitzer-winning critic.

In the new issue of The New Yorker, James Wood takes a look at The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet: "This is to argue not that David Mitchell should be more like Tolstoy or Conrad or Beckett but, curiously, that he might be more Mitchellian—that the reader wants a kind of moral or metaphysical pressure that is absent, and that has ceded all the ground to pure storytelling."

The Paris Review blog has a Q&A with Jennifer Egan, author of The Goon Squad, a piece of which was published in The New Yorker and discussed here.

Click here for the Never Let Me Go trailer. I didn't like the book as much as I hoped I would, but the trailer makes the film look good. ____________________________

2010 Book Awards

  • National Book Critics Circle Award
    • Winner: Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall
  • PEN/Faulkner Award
    • Winner: Sherman Alexie's War Dances
  • Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award
    • Winner: Brigid Pasulka's A Long, Long Time Ago and Essentially True
  • Pulitzer Prize
  • Orange Prize
    • Winner: Barbara Kingsolver's The Lacuna
  • Man Booker Prize
    • Late July
    • Early September
    • Winner: October 12
  • Nobel Prize in Literature
    • Winner: October
  • Giller Prize
    • Longlist: September 20
    • Shortlist: October 5
    • Winner: November 9
  • National Book Award
    • Finalists: October 13
    • Winner: November
____________________________

2009 Book Awards

  • National Book Critics Circle Award
    • Winner: Roberto Bolano's 2666
  • Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award
    • Winner: Michael Dahlie's A Gentleman's Guide to Graceful Living
  • PEN/Faulkner Award
  • Orange Prize
    • Winner: Marilynne Robinson's Home
  • Man Booker Prize
    • Winner: Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall
  • Nobel Prize in Literature
    • Winner: Herta Müller
  • National Book Award
    • Winner: Colum McCann's Let the Great World Spin

Philip Roth: Zuckerman Unbound

Before you read the book:

While reading Zuckerman Unbound (1981), Roth’s sequel to the delightful (that’s only partially the right word) The Ghost Writer, I discovered something unexpected about myself.  When I’m reading these books I must look as giddy as a teenage girl (and their moms) reading Twilight.  My thrill is not some suave vampire, but fantastic sentences, incredible timing, and stunning depth!

In Zuckerman Unbound we meet Nathan Zuckerman in his thirties.  Though his writing has been successful already, he just published his major work that launched him into stardom: Carnovsky.  Now rich, famous, the subject of gossip columns, and well recognized as a literary genius, he must deal with the downside of his dream while transitioning into celebrity life.  On the surface, that is what this book is about: being famous. 

But what Roth has accomplished is so much more, delving deeply into the other elements in the life of a man who has achieved all he wanted but who is beginning to take the measure of the costs.  Some of the costs are comical: “What the hell are you doing on a bus, with your dough?” (the first line in the novel).  Others are disturbing, like his hilarious encounter with the Alvin Pepler, an incredibly amusing quasi-Herb Stempel, the guy who took the dive in the quiz show scandals.  We are fortunate to have two extended discussions between Zuckerman and Pepler!  Pepler, still furious that he, the obvious genius, took a fall and now has nothing to show for it, is trying to write a book about his life.  Zuckerman, in a way, since both are from Newark and are Jewish, has written that book with Carnovsky.  But these encounters and others are increasingly disturbing and potentially threatening:

Zuckerman the stupendous sublimator spawning Zuckermaniacs!  A book, a piece of fiction bound between two covers, breeding living fiction exempt from all the subjugations of the page, breeding fiction unwritten, unreadable, unaccountable and uncontainable, instead of doing what Aristotle promised from art in Humanities 2 and offering moral perceptions to supply us with the knowledge of what is good or bad. . . . If only he could understand that it is the writers who are supposed to move the readers to pity and fear, not the other way around!

In the midst of this, Zuckerman encounters unwelcome feelings – is it potential regret about what this fame has cost his relationship with his family?  He has already been divorced three times.  From The Ghost Writer we know that his relationship with his family is strained because of his artistic subjects which they think are exploitative and case not only the family but the Jewish people in a negative light, a difficult thing for them to stomach so soon after the Holocaust.  And now, to make matters worse, people think Zuckerman’s mother is Carnovsky’s mother.  However, what Zuckerman feels is not exactly regret – not yet, at least.  Here Zuckerman is analyzing whether he should feel regret.  And everyone telling him he should be more repentent serve only to show him that he shouldn’t.  That’s exactly the type of thing he’s trying to get away from.  This along with the occasional maniac on the street cause Zuckerman to consider withdrawing from society:

First you lock yourself away in order to stir up your imagination, now you lock yourself away because you’ve stirred up theirs.

I only wish I could adequately convey what this book contains.  It is not a simple “perils of fame and fortune” story.  It is much more nuanced than that, thankfully.  And on the side, Roth allows examination of other elements.  For example, the book contains some hard glances at Newark, where both Roth and Zuckerman (and Pepler!) grew up, a city visibly declining in the 1960s.  Zuckerman has moved to New York City, but his stories, like Carnovsky, take place in a pre-war Newark that no longer exists, and this has led to the implication that he has exploited it like he exploited his family.

Newark is finished, idiot!  Newark is barbarian hordes and the Fall of Rome!

I have put off reading the next book in the series, The Anatomy Lesson, just in an attempt to prolong the joy.

After you read the book:

Having your father’s last word - ”bastard” – be directed at you must be difficult (and comical – I loved all the theories about what else it was he might have said “better,” “batter,” “faster”).  But I really like how Roth does not allow the reader to fully sympathize with Zuckerman or with his father.  In a way, the decline of Zuckerman’s relationship with his family is tragic, a higher cost to pay for art (and fame) than I am willing to pay, but my family isn’t the same as Zuckerman’s.  I could easily see Zuckerman’s perspective.  He’s cut the ties that have held him back.  The reaction by his father has only strained things more given Zuckerman even more grounds for separation. 

However, Zuckerman’s brother Henry has some painful insights into the matter, and sets himself as a great counter to Zuckerman’s emancipated state.  Henry is in a marriage in which he feels obligated to stay.  He has always sought to please others, including their father.  Yet even now Henry is having an affair.  Is it noble of Henry to keep up the façade?  To let sleeping dogs lie just because it might be unpleasant to disclose the truth?  To me, neither Zuckerman nor Henry are saintly.  Neither of them have the answer.

2 comments to Philip Roth: Zuckerman Unbound

  • redheadrambles

    Shamefully, Roth is one of the literary titans I have yet to take on – any suggests of where to start?

  • Unfortunately, Zuckerman Unbound is only my third Roth book. My first taste was Everyman. It was good, but I did not enjoy it anything like I have enjoyed the Zuckerman books so far. So from my experience, I would recommend picking up The Ghost Writer, the first Zuckerman book. I think it’s both playful and deep. I will soon be reading his other, longer books, but I think these Zuckerman books might act as a good primer.

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